All releases of Monitorix

Release Notes: This is a maintenance release that mainly fixes a pair of bugs. The first one was already announced and it included a work-around. The second one affected the Email Reports graph, which was sending emails with no graphs. The Changes file was updated with the rest of the changes and bugfixes.

Release Notes: This version introduces many changes, lots of new features, and many bugfixes. Two new graphs were provided: one to monitor an unlimited number of APC UPS devices (using the apcupsd daemon), and the other to monitor the details of the current network connections (IPv4 and IPv6) including protocol-specific statistics using the netstat command.

Release Notes: This version introduces some interesting new features. It has a complete new graph to monitor an unlimited number of Memcached installations, a new option called max_historic_years to be able to configure how many years of historical data will be kept (up to 5 years), two new alerts in the disk graph to control the disks health, etc. This version also fixes an important number of bugs and two security issues not covered yet in the previous 3.3.1 version. The rest of the changes and bugs fixed are, as always, reflected in the Changes file. Also, check the monitorix.conf(5) man page for all the details.

Release Notes: This is a maintenance release that fixes a serious bug in the built-in HTTP server. It was discovered that the handle_request() routine did not properly perform input sanitization which led into a number of security vulnerabilities. An unauthenticated, remote attacker could exploit this flaw to execute arbitrary commands on the remote host. All users still using older versions are advised to upgrade to this version, which resolves this issue.

Release Notes: This version introduces two new graphs: one to monitor an unlimited number of Wowza Media Servers and another to monitor an unlimited number of Alternative PHP Cache installations either locally or on remote Web servers. A complete email reporting mechanism was added for those system administrators who prefer receive graphs via email instead of using a Web browser. The are some new interesting options that help to make daily system monitoring more comfortable. There were also other changes and bugfixes.

Release Notes: This is an enhancement release, but also includes a fix for a bug that prevented it from seeing the Core temperatures in the LM-Sensors graph. The improvements in this version are mainly in the built-in HTTP server, which from now on includes the ability to use the Basic access authentication mechanism to access the Web server. It also includes the ability to deny and/or allow IP addresses with the new host_deny and host_allow options.

Release Notes: This version introduces a new major feature, a new graph to monitor the sensors of a Raspberry Pi card, which includes its clock frequencies, temperature, and voltages. Another important new feature is support of ATI cards in the lmsens graph, which will be able to display its temperature. As in the NVIDIA case, it requires the ATI official drivers. It also includes the new option temperature_scale to be able to toggle between values in Celsius or in Fahrenheit in all graphs that show temperatures.

Release Notes: This is mainly a bugfixing version which also includes a new FTP statistics graph.
This new graph supports either ProFTPD and vsftpd log file formats,
and although it covers the
most basic aspects of an FTP server, it should be very useful for daily monitoring.
The main reason for this release, though, is that a number of important bugs were fixed,
so all users still using older Monitorix versions are encouraged to upgrade to this one.

Release Notes: This release involved a large rewrite, which lead to a completely modular code structure with a reduced memory footprint in some cases. It also included a number of new features and fixes for many bugs, and uses 'strict' and 'warnings' in all modules. An HTTP server is now built in for people that don't want to install an HTTP server (Apache, Nginx, lighttpd, etc.) to see the Monitorix graphs.

Release Notes: This release includes a number of improvements in the MySQL graph. It also includes a new feature in the Network Port traffic accounting to support either incoming and outgoing connections. There are new alert capabilities in the Mail MTA graph that should help indicate whether the number of delivered messages per minute is exceeding some defined threshold and if the mail queue is growing for any reason. There are other changes and bugfixes.